Morning Bid: Ceasefire on a knife edge
Quick Take
Ceasefire negotiations remain precarious amid ongoing tensions and potential escalations.
Key Points
- Negotiations face significant challenges from both sides.
- Recent incidents threaten to derail peace efforts.
- International community calls for restraint and dialogue.
📖 Reader Mode
~2 min readBy Mike Dolan
3 min read
By Mike Dolan
May 19 (Reuters) -
What matters in U.S. and global markets today
By Mike Dolan, Editor-at-Large, Finance and Markets
Global oil prices, stocks and bond yields levelled off on Tuesday as U.S. President Donald Trump held out hopes for a breakthrough in Iran peace talks, easing fresh tensions that had built again over the weekend.
Trump announced on Monday that he’d called off new attacks on Iran that had been planned for today, saying there was a “very good chance” of reaching a deal limiting Iran’s nuclear programme.
I’ll get into that and more below.
But first, check out my latest column on what a Kevin Warsh-led Federal Reserve could mean for long bonds.
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CEASEFIRE ON A KNIFE EDGE
President Trump’s latest remarks came after Tehran sent a fresh peace proposal to Washington via mediator Pakistan. Crude prices ticked back on the news, coming off yesterday’s highs, though not by much, with Brent crude staying elevated over $110 per barrel on Tuesday morning.
The wider market reaction was modest. Investors are now weary of the back and forth and remain anxious about the fallout of the energy market squeeze, especially as commercial oil inventories run down their final weeks of supply, according to a warning from International Energy Agency chief Fatih Birol on Monday.
Asian shares were shaky on Tuesday, with South Korea’s KOSPI falling more than 3%, while Wall Street futures edged down before the bell. European shares rose in early trading, however.
Meantime, restive bond markets calmed down somewhat overnight, partly due to the oil price retreat. The pullback in gilt yields, however, owed more to developments in the brewing struggle for the leadership of Britain’s ruling Labour Party.
Andy Burnham, mayor of Manchester and the leading contender to challenge Prime Minister Keir Starmer, said he was committed to the government’s existing self-imposed fiscal rules. Gilts were also buoyed by the IMF’s call for the Bank of England to hold off on raising interest rates for now, assuming energy prices fall.
In corporate news, a possible mega-merger in the U.S. energy sector caught investors' attention on Monday as NextEra announced it was seeking to buy Dominion in a $66.8 billion deal. The deal - which would value Dominion shares at a 23% premium to the standing market price - would create the third-biggest U.S. energy firm. Dominion shares jumped 10% on the bid.
— Originally published at finance.yahoo.com
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